Traditional London hotels may be booking up quickly in anticipation of this summer’s Olympic Games, but a handful rooms with a decidedly different flavour still have late-July and August availability through home-booking sites like OneFineStay and Airbnb.

Like the
city’s hotels, most of these properties are demanding a rather high price tag, but
each has an odd architectural past or out-of-the-ordinary furnishings to make
for a memorable night’s rest, even after the Olympic torch goes out.

Converted churchIf it was not for
the grand ceiling, the Arundel Square apartment inside of St Clements might look like any other modern dwelling. But the
large wooden beams in the fourth floor apartment still recall the building’s
days as an Anglican church before it was turned into luxury apartments. The two-bedroom space has a wide, open loft
and rents for £406 a night
during the games.

Dance centralFor people who want
to party on after the last medal is awarded, Russell Gardens Mews in the Holland Park neighbourhood
should fit the bill. The four-bedroom house features not only a dance floor
with an LED display, but a full-blown DJ booth as well (the owner was a former
DJ himself). Designed by Hogarth Architects of London, the space also includes a
cinema room, a spa bath and a sauna (both with programmable lighting), and
rents for £758 a night.

Former water towerIt takes only six
flights of stairs to reach these sky-high rooms in North Kensington. An
old water tower, seven meters in diameter, now houses three one-bedroom apartments
for rent, all of which have spectacular views, each for £134 a night.

HouseboatA two-storey houseboat that sits
between the Westminster and Chelsea bridges has floor-to-ceiling windows
overlooking the Thames. A swimming pool on the pier where the boat docks also
has views of the river. One of the double rooms on the upper floor is available
for just £102 a night (minimum of three
nights), but the whole two-bedroom space and open living area is available on request.

House of curiositiesDescribed as “a place where art meets artifice”, every cranny within King Street in Covent Garden seems packed with some sort of
oddity. Renaissance tapestries, ancient weapons, Greek sculptures and a 19th-century
grand piano are just some of the knick-knacks within the one-bedroom living
space, which starts at £406 a night.